Radar Sweep
Over 1,300 Airmen Leaving Active Duty Through Early Departure Offers
As of June 17, 1,339 officers and enlisted airmen were approved to retire by Sept. 1, separate by Sept. 29 or participate in the Palace Chase program, said Air Force spokesperson Maj. Holly Hess. Palace Chase lets active-duty members transfer the remaining time in their military commitment to serve in the Air National Guard or Air Force Reserve.
Integration of MH-139 Defensive Systems Causes FAA Certification Delay
The integration of two defensive systems on the Boeing MH-139A helicopter has delayed two Federal Aviation Administration supplemental type certificates for the aircraft–both required approvals, given that the helicopter adds military equipment to the Leonardo-supplied AW139 commercial helicopter. In fiscal 2021, the Air Force received $194 million for eight MH-139As, but the service has budgeted none for fiscal 2022 because of the FAA STC approval delays.
The National Guard Just Simulated A Cyberattack That Brought Down Utilities Nationwide
National Guardsmen just completed a two-week training exercise which saw them respond to a simulated cyberattack that took out critical utilities across the United States. The exercises have become an annual event, but this year took on even more significance after coming on the heels of several major ransomware and cyber attacks that crippled large parts of American infrastructure in recent months.
Two Reasons Britain Could Slow its Purchase of the F-35
The high costs of supporting F-35s and a failure to quickly integrate the MBDA Meteor missile to the aircraft could slow British plans to buy more of the jets, defence secretary Ben Wallace warned June 23. Wallace told Britain’s Parliamentary defence select committee that he had the budget to buy more than the 48 jets the military has already ordered, but wanted to see progress controlling maintenance costs and fair treatment for integrating Meteor.
Russia Says Next Time it May Fire to Hit Intruding Warships
Russia is prepared to target intruding warships if they fail to heed warnings, a senior Russian diplomat declared June 24 after a Black Sea incident in which a British destroyer sailed near Crimea in an area that Russia claims as its territorial waters. Russia said one of its warships fired warning shots and a warplane dropped bombs in the path of British destroyer Defender to drive it away from waters near the Crimean city of Sevastopol. Britain denied that account, insisted its ship wasn’t fired upon and said it was sailing in Ukrainian waters.
Army, Navy Satellite Operations to Consolidate under Space Force
The U.S. Space Force later this year will begin to take over the operation of 11 Navy narrowband communications satellites. It also will absorb Army units that currently operate military communications payloads, a Space Force official said June 23. The transition, scheduled to begin in October, will create a more integrated U.S. military satcom enterprise which for decades has “largely been a loose federation,” said Col. Matthew Holston, commander of Space Delta 8 at Schriever Air Force Base, Colorado.
Opinion: Securing America’s Interests Over Afghanistan
“The stark reality is that after two wars, a generation-long occupation of foreign lands, more than 6,500 Americans killed and more than 52,000 wounded, and trillions of dollars expended, the results are highly unsatisfying. While it is tempting to simply ‘run for the exit,’ President Biden and his team should ensure the U.S. drawdown from Afghanistan preserves key military options to protect enduring interests—namely, to manage the threat posed by terrorism and violent extremists. Air and space power will be key elements of those options,” writes David Deptula, Dean of the Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies.
SOCOM Preparing for ‘Omni-Domain’ Battle
Special Operations Command’s chief data officer is looking beyond the military’s multi-domain operations strategy for the best way to manage a deluge of data and information. The Defense Department is currently developing a vast network of “internet-of-things” devices that will connect the services’ platforms, preparing them for multi-domain operations across air, land, sea, space and cyberspace. Joint all-domain command and control, or JADC2, is envisioned as a way to better link the armed forces’ sensors and shooters on the battlefield in support of the concept.
DOD Quietly Calls for Shutdown of 70-Year-Old Committee on Women in the Military
In January of this year, the Pentagon quietly demanded the resignations of the 21 volunteer members of the Defense Advisory Committee on Women in the Services, a roster that included eight retired generals and admirals. The ink was barely dry on the committee's 70-year historical review, a 58-page document that described how DACOWITS had advocated on behalf of military women since 1951 on issues ranging from their right to fly fighter jets and serve in combat to the fit of body armor and online harassment.
Great-grandson of Last Living WWII Medal of Honor Recipient Completes Marine Boot Camp
Graduation is quite an achievement for young Marines who have conquered boot camp—but this year's graduation is truly one for the ages. And for the first time since COVID-19 hit, all family members are allowed to attend the proud moment. In attendance for graduation is legendary Marine Hershel "Woody" Williams. At 97, he is the last living Medal of Honor recipient from World War II. Among the new Marines passing in review is his great-grandson, Cedar Ross.